McShane integrability vs Bochner integrability #
In this file we prove that any Bochner integrable function is McShane integrable (hence, it is
Henstock and GP integrable) with the same integral. The proof is based on
[Russel A. Gordon, The integrals of Lebesgue, Denjoy, Perron, and Henstock][Gordon55].
We deduce that the same is true for the Riemann integral for continuous functions.
Tags #
integral, McShane integral, Bochner integral
The indicator function of a measurable set is McShane integrable with respect to any locally-finite measure.
If f is a.e. equal to zero on a rectangular box, then it has McShane integral zero on this
box.
If f has integral y on a box I with respect to a locally finite measure μ and g is
a.e. equal to f on I, then g has the same integral on I.
A simple function is McShane integrable w.r.t. any locally finite measure.
For a simple function, its McShane (or Henstock, or ⊥) box integral is equal to its
integral in the sense of MeasureTheory.SimpleFunc.integral.
If f : ℝⁿ → E is Bochner integrable w.r.t. a locally finite measure μ on a rectangular box
I, then it is McShane integrable on I with the same integral.
If f : ℝⁿ → E is continuous on a rectangular box I, then it is Box integrable on I
w.r.t. a locally finite measure μ with the same integral.
If f : ℝⁿ → E is a.e. continuous and bounded on a rectangular box I, then it is Box
integrable on I w.r.t. a locally finite measure μ with the same integral.